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Web Business by Ken Burbary

Digital Marketing, Social Media, Web Technology

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The New Brand Web Site Standard – Social Media Integration

August 6th, 2009 · Comments · Branding, Business, Social Media

A new trend is beginning to emerge among brand websites. Some brands, more established in social media uses, have taken the next step beyond maintaining a social presence on the platforms and begun integrating relevant online conversation into their brand websites, providing consumers with a real-time view into what others are saying about a brand’s products and/or services. This isn’t insignificant, nor the first time it has been done. Earlier this year, Skittles took the first step and threw out the typical brand web site only to replace it with a home base of Skittles content pulled directly from the social web (Wikipedia, YouTube, Twitter and Flickr pages).

However, social media integration within brand sites has evolved since Skittles took the leap. Recent examples by Nissan and Ford offer consumers a hybrid of traditional brand site content mashed up with social media content. Let’s look at a few examples in detail.

Nissan – http://www.nissanusa.com/leaf-electric-car/

nissanleaf

Initial observations: Nissan is displaying questions and answers submitted via Twitter. Is it really a raw, unfiltered, feed though? My submission wasn’t displayed instantly, and appeared to get submitted for review. Which means this is more of a moderated approach to social media integration. This is understandble given the risks associated with blindly displaying content from the social web, yet one that has also caused problems for other brands in the past due to censorship concerns, and calls for more transparency. Regardless, I admire Nissan’s spirit in attempting to provide a real world view of what questions other consumers are asking, and the answers given. Is this a step towards car buyers research 2.0?

Ford – http://www.fordvehicles.com/the2010mustang/

Ford Mustang

Initial observations: Ford is taking a different approach but sticking with the same spirit of social integration. The 2010 Ford Mustang site provides the traditional brand site data but enhances that by pulling in relevant blog posts across the social web. Again, I applaud the brands efforts to be transparent and provide related social content for prospective buyers. The process for determining where to pull from and which social web content gets displayed is unknown, but one can assume some moderation, much like the Nissan example.

Verdict: I like it. Adding more consumer value beyond basic product info. In-market buyers can not only get product specs on the brand site but also other consumers perspectives and answers. We’re seeing the evolution of the corporate and product brand site. The impact social media is having on consumer perception and expectation is staggering. These examples show progressive brands that are rapidly experimenting with the most effective ways to integrate traditional and social content together. This is only the beginning and I look forward to watching the continued evolution because in the end both parties win. Brands and consumers. And that is an ending we don’t typically see enough.

More?

Have you seen other examples like these? Please share in the comments below.

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Tags: ····

  • geoffnorthcott
    Hi Ken,

    Great post, two examples I hadn't seen before. I've noticed the same thing and have been collecting a few examples as well. A few more to add to your list include Axe and Pepsi. Details in my post here on Brand Presence Strategy in the Social Web Era: http://bit.ly/dp9EP

    Cheers,
    Geoff
  • My hands-down favorite example is the BETA site for CP+B Group.

    http://beta.cpbgroup.com/

    As Alex Bogusky says in the welcome video, everything gets posted—"the good, the bad and the mildly unnerving."

    I found the site the day buzz was flying about their intern video being racist. All the tweets were there.

    Personally, I find this brilliant. It affectively defuses the sting of negative press, by, basically, extending your definition of 'brand' to the entire conversation.

    There's no such thing as partially authentic. It's oxy-moronic.

    The biggest thing social media has taught me is that brand, personal or corporate, is built much more on behavior than on the words, spoken or written.

    When a brand steps out and says, Bring it, which CP+B basically did, they look strong.

    When a brand jumps through huge hoops, like building a site that appears unfiltered, and then filters it, they look weak and inefficient. Worse, they look dishonest. They would be better off to leave all SM off their site. I'd rather hang out with the guy who has clothes all over his bedroom floor than the guy who shoves them under his bed any day.

    Just saying.

    Interesting topic. Gonna go RT it with ref to CP+B. And it will appear on their BETA site within the minute. Check it.

    Jen
  • Jen - Thanks for mentioning the CPB example. I forgot about their site but it is indeed one of the best examples of unfiltered social media + brand site integration
  • The integration of the social web onto corporate/brand websites is a big deal, and a trend Jeremiah Owyang has been anticipating for a while.

    My hunch, though, is that brands won't embrace true transparency via unfiltered inclusion of social mentions. The risk/reward analysis probably doesn't work out as well as we'd all like it to.

    A more likely scenario is what Ford and Nissan are doing here. But I don't consider that social integration. I consider selective message control, wrapped in the shiny new publicity machine of "social media innovation."

    Websites had this sort of faux social media years ago, but we called it Frequently Asked Questions and Testimonials. And the reality then, as now, was a carefully orchestrated message.

    Pulling in a few favorable comments from social media sites isn't "being social" -- it's message management. Effective? Maybe. But social? No.
  • Great post! I have been advising clients now for 2010 planning to ensure that Social Integration will be a must moving forward - if any other reason because consumers are living more and more on Social networks and will not find static websites engaging anymore. Websites will need to evolve to incorporate relevant, new content and the brand marketing voice only will just not work for this new online consumer.
  • rmsorg
    I agree with you that this is great integration between brand & consumers and is a win win situation for both parties. Transparency is key in social media today & the faster the corporations embrace this the better off they will be.
  • Completely agreed. People will crawl through glass to communicate with one another -- it's only a matter of time before engagement becomes the norm, rather than the exception.
  • Yep. Expect this trend to continue. Brands that don't follow suit could be at a disadvantage w/consumer that expect an integrated experience
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